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INTRODUCTION TO
ADVERTISING
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION TO ADVERTISING:
“Nobody counts the number of ads you run; they just remember the impression
you make."
William (Bill) Bernbach
"Doing business without advertising is like winking at a girl in the dark. You
know what you’re doing, but nobody else does."
Stuart H. Britt
“Advertising is the missing link between product attributes and consumer
perceptions.”
Alyque Padamsee
“I have learned that it is far easier to write a speech about good advertising than
it is to write a good ad.”
Leo Burnett
1.1 Background:
Advertising is something that one can love or hate but cannot ignore! Advertising is a
process of communication between the seller and the prospective buyer. Advertising
has evolved over the years as a response to the evolution of business and trade in the
society. Advertising works on the simple phenomena of buying time and space in
mass media to reach out to the targeted group of consumers. This process of deciding
what to say, when to say, how to say, whom to say and where to say requires skills,
knowledge and research. That’s why at times advertising is referred as a mixture of
science and art. The scope of advertising has broadened over the last decade or two.
Advertising in the last few decades has come a long way, from merely informing the
prospect of the availability if products and services to a skilful strategy in marketing
to making brand an extension of people’s attitude and personality (Jethwany and Jain,
2006).
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Advertising is in a state of change due to growth of digital technology, online
communication, consumers accustomed to the commercial environment and increase
in clutter (Springer 2007).
1.2 Definitions:
“Any paid form of non-personal presentation and promotion of ideas, goods and
services by an identified sponsor”
Definitions Committee, American Marketing Association, 1948
This has been the most commonly used definition of advertising. It has managed to be
relevant even in the changing times. This definition uniquely points out what
advertising is and what it is not. It clarifies that advertising is an effort which is
sponsored and paid and the communication is to a mass of people and therefore it
used mass media. So advertising here is defined as a weapon to communicate to the
masses.
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Claude Shannon and Warren Weaver ’s Model of Communication
The Shannon-Weaver model (1947) can be a good reference point for understanding
how advertising fits into this process of communication. Here communication is
between buyers and sellers and uses a medium. The marketer needs to understand the
target group of consumers and accordingly encode the message in a language that the
receiver would understand and appreciate. Advertising demands strong media
planning and scheduling for the message to reach to the consumers and therefore in
the process there is a lot of emphasis on “media”. The feedback in terms of consumer
reactions and post advertising research give great insights into the effectiveness of the
process, weak areas and sets a ground for the next round of advertisements.
Advertising is hit by noise which can be internal as well as external. Noise can be
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one of the main reasons of failure of advertising in a given situation. Noise is created
due to media failure, clutter, competitive shouting, and internal disturbances and so on
and so forth. Thus, when advertising is studied and analyzed as a process of
communication, the importance of each pillar and stage of communication process
becomes crystal clear to the sender of the message.
As the marketing communication is moving towards integrated marketing
communication using multiple consumer touch points to talk to the consumer,
“harmony" in communication becomes a challenge!
MEDIA
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Each media type has a set of pros and cons. While print scores on retrieval value,
national coverage and credibility it loses on grounds like low literacy, time poverty of
consumers, unable to create dramatic impact. Newspapers and magazines still remain
a strong medium to communicate authentic information but internet and reduction in
average time given to reading newspapers is acting as a challenge to this age old
medium. Television today has emerged as a strong platform for advertisers due to the
reach and splurge seen in niche channels like Pogo, Disney, Zee Bangla, Zee Gujarati.
Television being an audio visual medium gives the dramatization effect and therefore
marketers prefer to exploit this medium to the fullest. Adding to all this is the
popularity of various genres like entertainment, sports, religion, spirituality, drama
which give a better choice in terms of target audience. The limitation is that it is too
costly and therefore not affordable to all and again there are areas where satellite
television or the transmission quality has not reached. Radio, all of a sudden is back in
the race with private FM channels. In relation to television advertising on radio is less
costly but fails to create "connect” as compared to television shows. The biggest
advantage of cinema as a medium is the promise of getting a captive audience for
three hours stretch and absence of remote control and therefore no channel swapping.
In film placement is still in the nascent stage in India. Marketers have realized the
potential of placing a brand in a relevant film and therefore they have started using the
word "in-script” placement. The drawback of this medium is the declining footfalls
due to cable television, era of home theatres and internet/mobile downloads. Outdoors
like hoardings, bus stands, have been traditionally used to create bigger than life
images of the product or information related to the product. However, outdoor is used
as a secondary medium and plays a supportive role in the media plan.
India is witnessing a boom in the internet and mobile telephony sector. Internet,
mobile, blogs, social networking sites like Orkut and Face book are treated as new
media in marketing communications industry. The biggest advantage that they offer is
of customization and reach. Blogs are a potent tool to reach the youth who live their
lives virtually out of an inbox! Media fragmentation and inability to deliver the
,
desired ...
goals have given .9
birth to ambient" media. Toilet walls, air tickets, train and
bus covers, petrol pumps, retail parking spaces, trolleys, buildings all are considered
2 Branded spaces and artifacts used to promote in everyday environments. They usually use surprise
tactics and use their space as a context to work effectively. Also called stealth advertising.
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as ambient media. Almost all brands use ambient media as it is cost effective,
relatively clutter free and hits the consumer at a time when his attention span is the
maximum. Tabasco sauce, the fiery American chilly sauce, ran an innovative
campaign in South African restaurants for a mild version of the product. The ambient
medium used was branded toilet paper carrying the slogan: 'Don't you wish you'd had
mild Tabasco instead?' (Shankar and Horton, 1999). A brilliant example from India
can be of Kurkure brand using Indian Railways and branding a train as Kurkure
Express!
The right media depends a lot on synergies created between what the media vehicle
has to offer and what the marketer expects. Mostly marketers use multiple media to
reach out to the maximum number of consumers in the target audience. For e.g. in the
re-branding exercise of mobile service provider Vodafone in order to rename Hutch
as Vodafone, all traditional mediums and ambient media were used for highest
visibility and recall.
Print Ad TVC
Lynxjet, a campaign in 2006 for Axe Lynx products in Australia, used as many as 25
different types of media in one promotion, ranging from commercials and stunts to
websites and online games (Springer 2007). New online and offline advertising spaces
are actively used today to lure the ad-conditioned consumer and mass media will face
tough competition from these new spaces.
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1.5 History of Advertising:
But as markets developed and more brands were being introduced in the market, it
was in the nineteenth century that marketers realized that promotion and
communication are the essential elements to survival, sustenance and growth in the
crowded market place. This gave birth to advertising agencies functioning as
institutions of creativity. Advertising became well known during World War I as
government started using ads for propaganda. Technological development in the
twentieth century served as a blessing for the advertising industry and marketers
started using mass media other than print i.e. cinema and radio for commercial
messages. President Calvin Coolidge pronounced a benediction on the business of
advertising in a 1926 speech: “Advertising ministers to the spiritual side of trade. It is
a great power that has been entrusted to your keeping which charges you with the
high responsibility of inspiring and ennobling the commercial world. It is all part of
the greater work of regeneration and redemption of mankind."4
3 www.mediaknowall.com is a website created for internet research for media studies. It draws
information from various websites and notes and reports on media studies. The website was referred on
Is1 October 2007.
4 The quote has been taken from the website www.memorv.loc.gov on Is' October 2007.
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1950s era saw advertising with an objective to create need among consumers.
Marketers focused energies on need creation as had better disposable incomes and
purchasing power. American homes became richer with the product that
revolutionized advertising and that product was “television”. Marketers found
television and presence of the same in majority of households a goldmine to be
tapped. The airwaves were full of programs like Kraft Television Theater, Colgate
Comedy Hour, and Coke Time. Americans soon discovered better standards of living
and materialistic comforts through brands advertised on television. Advertising
agencies function grew beyond buying space in media. They got involved in the art
work, copywriting, illustrations and production technologies. Gurus like David Ogilvy
and Leo Burnett were recognized as stars of advertising world and their theories
gained momentum around the globe. NBC executive Sylvester Weaver came up with
the idea of selling not whole shows to advertisers, but separate, small blocks of
broadcast time. Several different advertisers could buy time within one show, and
therefore the content of the show would move out of the control of a single advertiser
- rather like a print magazine. This became known as the magazine concept, or
participation advertising, as it allowed a whole variety of advertisers to access the
audience of a single TV show. Thus the 'commercial break’ as we know it was bonr.
And since then the saga of advertising continues!
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1. Volkswagen, "Think Small", Doyle Dane Bembach, 1959
2. Coca-Cola, "The pause that refreshes", D'Arcy Co.. 1929
3. Marlboro, The Marlboro Man, Leo Burnett Co., 1955
4. Nike, "Just do it", Wieden & Kennedy, 1988
5. McDonald's, "You deserve a break today", Needham, Harper & Steers, 1971
6. DeBeers, "A diamond is forever", N.W. Ayer & Son, 1948
7. Absolut Vodka, The Absolut Bottle, TBWA, 1981
8. Miller Lite beer, "Tastes great, less tilling", McCann-Erickson Worldwide,
1974
9. Clairol, Does she...or doesn't she?", Foote, Cone & Belding, 1957
10. Avis, "We try harder", Doyle Dane Bembach, 1963
I I. Federal Express, "Fast talker", Ally & Gargano, 1982
12. Apple Computer, "1984", Chiat/Day, 1984
13. Alka-Seltzer, Various ads, Jack Tinker & Partners; Doyle Dane Bernbach;
Wells Rich, Greene, 1960s, 1970s
14. Pepsi-Cola, "Pepsi-Cola hits the spot", Newell-Emmett Co., 1940s
15. Maxwell House, "Good to the last drop", Ogilvy, Benson & Mather, 1959
16. Ivory Soap, "99 and 44/100% Pure", Proctor & Gamble Co., 1 882
17. American Express, "Do you know me?", Ogilvy & Mather, 1975
1 8. U.S. Army, "Be all that you can be", N.W. Ayer & Son, 1981
19. Anacin, "Fast, fast, fast relief", Ted Bates & Co., 1952
20. Rolling Stone, "Perception. Reality.", Fallon McElligott Rice, 1985
21. Pepsi-Cola, "The Pepsi generation", Button, Barton, Durstine & Osborn, 1964
22. Hathaway Shirts, "The man in the Hathaway shirt", Hewitt, Ogilvy, Benson &
Mather, 1951
23. Burina-Shave, Roadside signs in verse, Allen Odell, 1925
24. Burger King, "Have it your way", BBDO, 1973
25. Campbell Soup, "Mmm mm good", BBDO, 1930s